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East Carolina coach Ruffin McNeill talks to defensive back
Domonique Lennon after the team worked out ahead of
Tuesday's media day. (Photo by W.A. Myatt) |
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ECU senior quarterback Shane Carden fires a passing during
Tuesday's practice session. (Photo by W.A. Myatt) |
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ECU defensive coordinator Rick Smith fields questions from
the members of the press during media day on Tuesday. (Photo
by W.A. Myatt) |
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ECU senior defensive lineman Chrishon Rose runs through a
drill during practice on Tuesday. (Photo by W.A. Myatt) |
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AAC MEDIA DAY |
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Cincinnati wearing
target |
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NEWPORT, RI � The media
voted Cincinnati as the
preseason favorite in the
American Athletic Conference
race for 2014. They used to
say that designation and 50
cents would get you a cup of
coffee.
It takes more coin
than that to java up
these days, but the
value of being
picked as the team
to beat remains
doubtful. ...
More
from Al Myatt... |
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Pictured: Cincinnati
coach Tommy
Tuberbille addresses
the press at the
American Athletic Conference
Media Day in Newport, Rhode
Island. (Photo by W.A.
Myatt.) |
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Coaches and players
say their piece |
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East
Carolina coach
Ruffin McNeill
dropped by the ESPN3
set on Tuesday for a
chat with John Rooke
(left) and Anthony
Becht (middle) at
the American
Athletic Conference
football kickoff
event in Newport,
Rhode Island. (Photo
by W.A. Myatt.) |
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American hosts the media |
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NEWPORT, RI � There's an
exit to Jamestown, MA as you
come back across the bridge
to Newport, RI, where the
American Athletic Conference
kicked off its Media Day on
Monday with a round of golf
at Newport National and a
clambake at the Hyatt
Regency on Goat Island. ...
More
from Al Myatt... |
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Pictured: Chefs
remove seafood from the fire
pit on the first day of the
American Athletic Conference
Media Days in Newport, Rhode
Island . (Photo by W.A.
Myatt.) |
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AAC Preseason Media
Poll
Rank Team
(First-place votes)
Points
1. Cincinnati
(17) 311
2. Central
Florida
(7) 296
3. Houston
(6) 268
4. East
Carolina
262
5. Southern
Methodist
158
6. South
Florida
157
7. Memphis
133
8. Temple
105
9. Connecticut
98
Tulane
98
11. Tulsa
94 |
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2013 AAC Football
Standings
Team Conference All
Central Florida
8-0 12-1
Louisville
7-1 12-1
Cincinnati
6-2 9-4
Houston
5-3 8-5
Southern Methodist
4-4 5-7
Rutgers
3-5 6-7
Connecticut
3-5 3-9
South Florida
2-6 2-10
Memphis
1-7 3-9
Temple
1-7 2-10 |
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By
Al Myatt
�2014 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
East Carolina has more starting experience in the
secondary on its coaching staff than on the 2014 roster.
Coach Ruffin McNeill was a multi-year starter in the
defensive backfield for the Pirates before graduating in 1980 and new
defensive staff assistant Kyle Chase was a starter at strong safety as
well during his career from 2003 to 2006.
Notable departures from a 10-3 team in 2013 include Damon
Magazu, who started all 13 games at free safety as a senior with 41 solo
tackles, 39 assists and five interceptions. Magazu announced his
presence with
a game-ending pick in overtime against N.C.
State as a freshman and had a knack for making big plays
throughout his career.
Also gone are Chip Thompson and Adonis Armstrong, junior
college transfers who were in on 57 and 48 tackles respectively last
season.
Thompson started 12 games at strong safety. Michael
Dobson stepped up at that spot in the bowl game with 14 tackles and an
interception when Thompson was sidelined. Armstrong made 13 starts at
field corner.
All of that is history as Pirates defensive coordinator
and secondary coach Rick Smith is inclined to say.
Josh Hawkins made four starts at the boundary corner
opposite Armstrong, and Detric Allen made nine starts.
"The guys we have can step up," Allen said Tuesday. "We
all can get the job done."
As much as any position group in the program, the
secondary will show if the Pirates are to the point of reloading with
quality depth as opposed to the less-desirable prospect of rebuilding.
"I think it is reloading," McNeill said Tuesday at media
day. "I think we've done a good job of recruiting the kids that fit
there."
McNeill also brought in Smith prior to 2013, a recruiting
effort in a sense that helped ECU lower its points allowed from 31.6
points in 2012 to 24.8 last season.
Smith coached the DBs for ECU's 2008 and 2009 Conference
USA championship teams during the Skip Holtz era. He went to South
Florida with Holtz after the 2009 season.
ECU had five interceptions against Tulsa in 2008 when the
Pirates claimed their initial C-USA title.
"One of the best secondary coaches I've been around,"
McNeill said of Smith. "I've been around some good ones. John Wiley (ECU
associate head coach and inside linebackers coach) is one. Carlos
Mainord (Texas Tech) is another one. I've been around some really good
ones."
Wiley coached the secondary at Appalachian State before
coming to Greenville with McNeill.
Smith has moved Allen to the field corner for the time
being as Hawkins has fallen into temporary disfavor.
"If I had to play somebody at the boundary corner today,
It would be Lamar Ivey," Smith said. "Another kid you can't count out is
(DaShaun) Amos. Great young man. Instinctive, smart, tough, great work
ethic. He'll be in that corner situation somewhere."
Allen was No. 1 on the preseason depth chart at the
boundary corner. That list showed Domonique Lennon leading the
competition at free safety and Terrell Richardson as the tentative
starter at strong safety.
Depth at the field corner includes DaShaun Amos and Rocco
Scarfone. DaShawn Benton is backing Allen at the boundary. Ivey was
behind Richardson and Travon Simmons was second team at free safety.
McNeill noted that the team is sometimes split in
practice to allow extra reps. Practically all of the secondary players
have cut their teeth on the college level on special teams.
"Our kids earn their way on special teams," McNeill said.
"Those reps count, too. Reps are reps and the reps are even more intense
on special teams. You don't have first down, second down, third down.
You've got one down. We need one play, one plus.
"I like the way that secondary is competing. One thing
Rick has done, he's developed competitive depth back there. Every guy
knows, you better play your A game when you've got a guy waiting to get
his turn. I'm looking forward to watching those guys develop throughout
camp."
Smith is more familiar with his talent than a year ago
when he had just had one spring practice to get acquainted with
personnel.
New regulations also permitted some contact between
players and coaches over the summer.
"I'm not going to sit here and tell you I'm not worried
about the secondary," Smith said Tuesday. "Wherever Detric Allen winds
up, he should be better. He played last year. Domonique Lennon didn't
play very much last year but Domonique is a better athlete than Magazu.
Is he a football player like Magazu? The jury is still out on that.
"Terrell Richardson can be better than Chip Thompson. Has
he played? No. What's he going to do when the lights go on?
"The secondary will be more athletic than last year. Are
they going to be better football players? You have to remember that
Chip, Adonis and Magazu played together for two years.
"When I was hired nobody knew who Detric Allen was. He
was on scout team. ... Right now, Josh is in the dog house with me. He
didn't do what he was supposed to do this summer academically. ... Josh
will be out of the dog house in two more days.
"We put great emphasis on our starters being leaders by
example. You're either a positive example or you're a negative example.
He had a great spring. (Hawkins) had a great offseason and this summer
he got to feeling his oats a little bit and just lost focus and he was a
poor example for my young players. He didn't go to class like he was
supposed to. He didn't show up a couple of times for 5 a.m. study hall
so he's been running five gassers every day after practice. When those
are done, he's out of the dog house.
"With Josh and Detric I feel like we can be as good as we
were last year at the corners. Then you've got Amos backing up, you've
got Ivey backing up. You've got Benton, so I think we'll be OK there."
Smith has confidence in the eventualities at safety as
well.
"Terrell Richardson is amazing to me," he said. "Last
year, I didn't think he worked hard. I thought he was just kind of
floating out there. All of a sudden last spring I said, 'Where did this
kid come from?' He said, 'Coach, I knew I wasn't going to play last
year.' He said, 'It's my turn.' I said, 'Good.' He had a great spring.
Domonique's playing great. Those two together, I really feel great about
the safeties.
"We moved Travon Simmons, a kid out of Atlanta, from
corner to safety. I moved him because I thought he was just a football
player. It makes sense to him. He understands. ... There was a kid we
let walk on last year, a preferred walk-on out of Virginia named Bobby
Faulk. Bobby had shoulder surgery and didn't get to go through spring
but he's about 6-2. He's going to be in the mix at safety. I've got him
working at strong safety right now. He might wind up being our back-up
safety."
True freshman Cody Purdie is facing an adjustment from
linebacker at New Bern High School but he has skills.
"I don't know where Cody Purdie is going to wind up,"
Smith said. "He is very, very talented. He's never played in the
secondary. He's having a hard time right now with adjustments. He could
possibly wind up at corner. He can run and he's a great kid."
Smith was defensive coordinator and secondary coach at
Tulane when the Green Wave was unbeaten in 1997.
"I see some of the same type stuff happening here with
our kids that happened there," Smith said. "Those kids loved each other
at Tulane. That's why they went undefeated. ... I think when you have a
guy like Jeff Connors (assistant athletic director for strength and
conditioning), he works those kids so hard, it kind of binds those kids
together. We had a great weight lifting coach at Tulane. He did the same
thing. The kids worked so hard. When those guys are exhausted and they
have to keep going they lean on each other and that builds
togetherness."
The future is a mystery is the corollary when Smith
asserts that the past is history.
There will be two-a-day practices, meetings, scrimmages
and film sessions as the Pirates approach the nonconference portion of
the schedule.
"I can't sit here and tell you if we're going to win 10
or nine or eight," Smith said. "All I can tell you is we're going to
play our tails off one play at a time."
Allen said he felt like the defensive unit as a whole
would be better than last year. Hawkins agreed.
"I don't feel worried at all," Hawkins said. "The
secondary has come together. We definitely have a physical and fast
defense."